Item #2299140 The Story of the Vollbehr Collection of Incunabula. Frederick W. Ashely.

The Story of the Vollbehr Collection of Incunabula

Providence, Rhode Island: Privately Published, 1932. Limited Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good. Item #2299140

#421 of 485. No jacket. Spine head and spine base rubbed, ink stamp on front free endpaper, adhesive residue on rear endpapers.

50 pp. An address delivered before the eleventh annual conference on printing education at a session in The Coolidge Auditorium Library of Congress Monday evening, June 27, 1932. "The Vollbehr Collection, stated George Parker Winship of the Harvard Library shortly before its purchase by act of Congress in 1930, "is representative, to an amazing degree, of every sort of publication which came from the fifteenth century presses." The collection contains incunabula produced at 635 different printing establishments and an rich selection of books in vernacular languages. This acquisition quadrupled the number of fifteenth century books held by the Library of Congress and established the Library as the leading center for the study of early printing. Otto Vollbehr was a German industrialist whose family had made a fortune in the dyestuff industry; he took up book collecting when his physician recommended that he adopt a hobby following a railway accident which left him with a serious nervous condition. In addition to collecting books he acquired “ready-made” collections of 15-18th century book illustrations and of printers' marks. The treasure of the Vollbehr Collection is the copy of the Bible produced by Johann Gutenberg at Mainz about 1456-the first book printed with movable type in the western world. The Library's Gutenberg Bible is one of the three surviving perfect copies on vellum. The work had been in the possession of the Benedictine Order for nearly five centuries before it was acquired by Dr. Otto Vollbehr from the Abbey of Saint Paul in eastern Carinthia, Austria. Bound as three volumes, the Bible retains the bookplate of the monastery of Saint Blasius (the owner of the work until the late eighteenth century) as well as its late sixteenth century white pigskin binding. There are 3,114 volumes in the Vollbehr Collection."

Price: $35.00